A
Chinese military surgeon had eight Chinese citizens killed to supply a
single foreign patient with a new kidney, said former Canadian Secretary of
State for Asia-Pacific David Kilgour on November 14. Kilgour spoke as a
special guest at the Asian Human Rights Week forum in Warsaw, on day two of
a five day program.

"The incredible thing is that the doctor
would…go down the names on sheets of paper looking for blood types and
tissue types and so on, and he [the patient] would point at names on the
list. The doctor would then go away and come back with organs," said Kilgour.

While conducting research in Asia, Kilgour
interviewed a now 35 year-old man (name and nationality withheld) who
received a kidney transplant at Shanghai No. 1 People's Hospital in 2003.
The man said that his surgeon was Dr Tan Jianming, Secretary General of the
Chinese Research Society of Dialysis and Transplantation. Dr Tan also holds
top posts in a number of Chinese military and civilian hospitals.

The patient suffered from an antibody condition
that made it difficult to find a suitable kidney. Over an eight day period,
four separate kidneys were brought to him and tested, said Kilgour. When
none of those worked, three months later he tried another four – the last of
which was a fit. The man was later transferred to No. 85 Hospital of the
People's Liberation Army to convalesce.

Dr Tan told the man explicitly that these
organs came from executed Chinese prisoners, and that at least some of the
organs had been harvested secretly, against the donors' will.

"I am certain that at least some of these were
Falun Gong practitioners who never went near a court, who were never
convicted of anything," said Kilgour.

Earlier in 2006, Kilgour co-wrote a report
detailing evidence of China's large scale state-supported killing of Falun
Gong prisoners of conscience – in order to extract their organs to sell for
huge profits to people such as this man. Kilgour and co-author human rights
lawyer David Matas estimated that over 41,000 organ transplants performed in
China could not be accounted for, based on published records.

Kilgour believes, based on many lines of
evidence, that apart from death row prisoners, Falun Gong practitioners are
particularly targeted for live organ harvesting, as opposed to other groups
that the Chinese Communist regime labels as "dissidents" or "enemies of
state."

Falun Gong is the peaceful spiritual practice
that saw its popularity grow at an astonishing rate in the 1990's. In 1999,
then-Chinese dictator Jiang Zemin outlawed the practice in China and ordered
its eradication. Multiple human rights organizations have documented the
communist regime's brutal, large scale persecution of Falun Gong
practitioners since that time.

Since the publication of their report last
July, Kilgour and Matas have traveled to over 20 countries searching for
support, as well as for new evidence that might either prove or disprove the
organ harvesting allegations. Over that time, in addition to the 18 lines of
evidence examined in the initial report, Kilgour says they found another ten
areas of evidence pointing to the same conclusion. He intends to publish an
updated report by the end of the year, and says that it will contain more
evidence of the Chinese military's involvement.

"We were hoping that it [the organ harvesting]
would have stopped by now, but we are convinced that it is still happening,"
said Kilgour.

Cautiously Optimistic

Yet Kilgour is cautiously optimistic.

The Transplantation Society (TTS), a global
body dedicated to the development of transplantation science, education and
ethics, issued a statement on the use of organs from Chinese executed
prisoners on November 6.

"TTS is opposed to the recovery of organs and
tissues from executed prisoners and from any other individual where an
autonomous consent for the procurement is lacking," said the statement.

"TTS should express concern that the recovery
of organs from executed prisoners [in China] has resulted in rampant
commercialism and transplant tourism," it said.

After Kilgour detailed the organ harvesting
evidence to the Australian parliament last August, the Australian media took
up the cause.

"I have evidence from a senior medical
professional in Australia that the number of Australians going for
transplant operations in China has [since] collapsed. We are delighted that
Australians have stopped," said Kilgour.

On November 15, Chinese state-controlled media
reported that Chinese Assistant Health Minister Huang Jiefu called for "an
information network that registers and keeps track of every human organ
donation."

"That's either a step in the right direction,
or it's a smoke screen," said Kilgour, in response to news of the official
statement.

Kilgour's revelations were part of series of
seminars examining the state of human rights in Asia being held November
13-17, 2006 in Warsaw, Poland. Warsaw's Asian Human Rights Week is focused
on human rights in Burma, Cambodia, North Korea, Vietnam, China, Tibet and
Bhutan.

The forum was organized by the Oriental Culture
Center, an organization dedicated to the promotion of Asian culture in
Poland, and Collegium Civitas, a top Polish private university specializing
in the humanities. It was under the patronage of Polish Minister of Culture
and Heritage, as well as the Mayor of Warsaw.

While in Warsaw, Kilgour also presented his
report to Marek Jurek, the elected leader of the Sejm, the lower house of
the Polish Parliament.

END

Baby
Parts for Sale (Organ harvesting has been going on for years in
America. Who are we to condemn the Chinese for human right's
abuses?)